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The Sentencing Project: Disenfranchisement News/Updates 10/6/08

Last-minute Registration Efforts Across the nation, advocates in many states have been working feverishly to educate individuals with felony convictions about their right to vote and assist them in registering. As many states' registration deadlines approach this week, national, local and grassroots efforts have registered scores of individuals who were unaware of their voting rights status. Georgia Texas Ohio Illinois New Jersey Kentucky (Courier Journal) Kentucky (Herald-Leader) Inmate Voting Numerous jails and prisons across the U.S. were filled with voter registration applications and absentee ballots as various local campaigns promoting voting for persons in prison, where legal, neared a close. Organization volunteers visited jail and prison facilities to distribute registration applications and absentee ballots to individuals awaiting trail or otherwise eligible to vote. Massachusetts Louisiana Georgia Alabama: Registration Suit Ensues The U.S. District Court has been brought in to decide whether Alabama can prohibit inmate voter registration efforts by visitors. Alabama law permits those incarcerated and formerly incarcerated to vote unless they were convicted of a crime of "moral turpitude," according to Ballot Access, but the definition of moral turpitude remains unclear. The governor's office reports that 480 of the state's 575 felony crimes are crimes of moral turpitude, according to the Birmingham News, which include murder, robbery, rape, and certain other offenses. In the wake of Corrections Commissioner Richard Allen terminating a voter registration drive in the state prison that had aimed at assisting people who had not been convicted of a disenfranchising crime, the issue has once again taken center-stage in Alabama. The state's Administrative Office of the Courts, which argues that only 70 state crimes should result in the loss of voting rights, claims thousands of people convicted of crimes are illegally being kept from casting ballots, the Huntsville Times reported. For more coverage, read editorials from the Tuscaloosa News and the Huntsville Times. National: The Sentencing Project, ACLU, Brennan Center for Justice Publish Disenfranchisement Reports The Sentencing Project released a report that found that since 1997, 19 states have amended felony disenfranchisement policies in an effort to reduce their restrictiveness and expand voter eligibility. The report, Expanding the Vote: State Felony Disenfranchisement Reform, 1997- 2008, documents a reform movement over the past eleven years that has resulted in more than 760,000 citizens having regained their right to vote. The report's release coincides with the introduction of new legislation in Congress to secure federal voting rights for nonincarcerated citizens. Last week, the American Civil Liberties Union and the Brennan Center for Justice released a joint report, De Facto Disenfranchisement, which documents that felony disenfranchisement laws are only half the story: untold hundreds of thousands of eligible voters are discouraged from registering and voting because they receive incorrect or misleading information - or no information at all - from elections and criminal justice officials and voter registration forms. The ACLU also released Voting with a Criminal Record, which reports on the variety and complexity of various states' disfranchisement policies that have effectively barred countless eligible Americans from the ballot box. The New York Times featured a blog posted by editorial staff writer, Brent Staples, on the three recently released reports that stated: "We tend to shun people who commit crimes - not just while they do time, but quite often for the rest of their lives. We bar them from housing, jobs, and yes, we strip them of the right to vote. Through these policies, we have created a large and growing felon class that is permanently cut off from the mainstream and stuck on a treadmill that often leads right back to the prison door. Rules that bar former inmates from the polls are excessively punitive, socially alienating and inconsistent with the core principles of American democracy." National: Federal Voting Rights Legislation Introduced Sens. Russ Feingold (D-WI), Benjamin Cardin (D-MD) and Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) introduced SB 3640 Friday, a bill that would secure the Federal voting rights of persons who have been released from incarceration. Sen. Feingold stated the following with the bill's introduction: "Mr. President, in a democracy, no right is more important than the right to vote; in our democracy, no right has been so dearly won. This country was founded on the idea that a just government derives its power from the consent of the governed, a principle codified in the very first words of our Constitution: 'We the People of the United States.'' From the Civil War through the women's suffrage movement through the Voting Rights Act of 1965 through the 26th Amendment, the continuing expansion of the franchise, a broadening of who 'we the people' are, is one of our great American stories. So today I will introduce the Democracy Restoration Act of 2008. This bill will guarantee that citizens who are not incarcerated have the right to vote in Federal elections. National: Reader's Digest 'Rocks the Vote' Reader's Digest featured an article headlined "Jailhouse Rock (the Vote)" which stated the need to release disenfranchisement laws in an effort to reintegrate individuals back into society. "That reasoning goes like this: After paying their 'debt to society,' in the old parlance, government's goal for these individuals-unless we want to see them back behind bars-should be nothing less than having them take their places in the fabric of American life. This entails reconnecting with their families, securing gainful employment, and becoming productive members in the social lives of their community and their nation. In the United States, implicit in this social contract is the right to vote." Illinois: For the Record, They Can Vote Following a training session for election judges that prompted eligibility questions, Journal-Star columnist Pam Adams makes an effort to clear any confusion about vote restoration laws in Illinois. She writes, "[o]nce more, for the record, the forgetful, the unknowledgeable and the ethically impaired, convicted felons can vote in Illinois. Banning felons from voting serves little purpose, especially after they've completed the sentence. They are still citizens." New Jersey: Voting is a Must State Senator Ronald L. Rice writes about confusion among many residents regarding New Jersey's disenfranchisement laws and underscores the importance of educating formerly incarcerated individuals in the Record. "[T]oday, too many people do not understand or exercise their voting rights, and as a result, entire segments of our population - and especially formerly incarcerated individuals - are being underrepresented at the polls on Election Day." He noted the significance of voting as part of the reintegration process for people who have been incarcerated and may feel alienated from the communities to which they return. "Voting is extremely important because it provides citizens with opportunities to make a differences in their own lives. Individuals can influence government decision-making through voting. The act of voting is the single greatest thing individual cans do to take part in government and in public discussion of important policy decisions." Oklahoma: Confusing Law Keeps Individuals Away from Polls "These unfortunate misinterpretations on a county-by-county basis, this just has to stop. We can't afford to disenfranchise people," ACLU of Oklahoma Legal Director C.S. Thornton was quoted as saying in the Tahlequah Daily Press. The ACLU of Oklahoma stated that individuals with felony convictions in one county were unable to register because both the applicant and the election board are unclear about the state's laws. The article explains: "A person convicted of a felony may not register to vote for a period of time equal to the time prescribed in the judgment and sentence of the felony. In other words, someone sentenced to a five-year, suspended sentence may not register for the five years spent serving that sentence. Someone convicted of a felony and sentenced to 10 years, but paroled after serving only three, still may not register for those 10 years originally sentenced. Those who have been convicted of a felony, but who have received a deferred sentence, may register to vote, as long as they are otherwise qualified. Those who have received a full pardon - restoring them to full citizenship - may also register to vote." Maryland: State Attorney Agrees with Year-old Reenfranchisement Law Sentinel columnist Mike Sarzo agrees with Prince George's County State's Attorney Glenn Ivey that voting rights should be restored to individuals with felony convictions. "Giving people a second chance is a bedrock principle of American society," Sarzo stated. "Allowing people to fully integrate back into the community after serving their sentences is an important way of letting people know they still have rights when they leave prison." Ivey expressed his support at a recent voting rights forum. In 2007, Maryland passed a law restoring voting rights to formerly incarcerated individuals who have completed their sentence. Virginia: Governor Believes in Vote Restoration Virginia Governor Tim Kaine has restored voting rights to nearly 1,500 individuals with a felony conviction this year, the Washington Times reported. Virginia, which is one of only two states that permanently disenfranchises all persons with a felony conviction, has a process by which interested parties can apply to the governor's office to have their voting rights restored. Gov. Kaine expedited the review process for petitioners with non-violent criminal records this summer, promising that all eligible persons who had submitted a restoration application by August 1st would be processed in time to register for this November's presidential election. Florida: State Fails to Restore Rights Accurately Of the 115,000 individuals with felony offenses who regained their civil rights since clemency rules were changed last year, only 9,000 have registered, according to a Tallahassee Democrat op-ed. Failures in notification efforts and appropriate follow up are to blame, Mark Schlakman states. He argues that recent efforts by Governor Charlie Crist to address the backlog are insufficient and, in order to implement sustainable reform, the state should readopt a 1975 clemency rule that made restoration virtually automatic, rather than relying on a cumbersome three-tier system. - - - - - - Help The Sentencing Project continue to bring you news and updates on disenfranchisement! Make a contribution today. Contact Information -- e-mail: [email protected], web: http://www.sentencingproject.org

The LEAP Report: October 2008

Issue V, Volume II- LEAP in Action- October 2008 This issue… · Did You Know…? · LEAP on Capitol Hill · Volunteer of the Month · Making Media · State by State · Campus Communities · International Overtures Did You Know? U.S. Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX) stated in February 2007, “The war on drugs is an abomination.” in response to a question asked by Howard Wooldridge, LEAP’s D.C. education specialist. U.S. Congresswoman Maxine Waters (D-CA) said, “To Jack Cole, I want to say: You are exactly right: We must end this war on drugs,” in response to LEAP Executive Director Jack Cole’s presentation September 25, 2008 at the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation Conference. LEAP on Capitol Hill Congressional Black Caucus Foundation Conference - contributed by D.C. Education Specialist Howard Wooldridge One hundred participants listened as four speakers discussed several of the evils and unintended consequences of modern prohibition; loss of voting rights, 100:1 disparity in sentencing between crack and powdered cocaine, which disproportionately impacted people of color, mandatory minimums and such. LEAP’s own Jack A. Cole was the final speaker. The screen lit up the LEAP badge and Jack launched into his presentation. I was in the audience and can report that every person in the room (which included two members of Congress and several staff aides) was held in rapt attention as the audience absorbed Jack’s slides and measured words. At the conclusion of the presentation, Congresswoman Maxine Waters spoke directly to Jack, voicing her support for our mission. After the session ended, Jack spent a solid hour speaking privately to over a dozen persons. LEAP’s Media Relations Director Tom Angell and I also spoke to another dozen or so attendees. Jack has certainly made my job in D.C. easier. Volunteer of the Month “You can blow and blow but you can’t blow the house down”-- Third Little Piggy Hurricane Ike blew and blew but the storm couldn’t stop our Volunteer of the Month. Dean Becker of Houston, Texas wears more than one hat when it comes to his passion. As the director and producer of the nationally syndicated Drug War News and Century of Lies radio shows, Dean has collected an incredible body of interviews with heads of state, drug warriors, political leaders and grassroots heroes alike. As a LEAP volunteer, Dean gives his time as a speaker and regularly features other LEAP speakers on his show. Dean has continued to produce his show since the passing of Ike in spite of being without power, going out of his way to travel to a local shopping center for WiFi access. We honor all of our speakers who give their time and talents to promote LEAP’s message, but this month, with the wolf blowing at the door and in the face of much adversity, Dean has truly earned the Volunteer of the Month award. Making Media The staff would like to welcome Tom Angell to the LEAP team as our new media relations director. Tom comes to us after four successful years with our ally Students for Sensible Drug Policy (SSDP). Tom’s experience with SSDP and as co-founder of the Rhode Island Patient Advocacy Coalition (that state’s medical marijuana organization) will serve him well as he takes on this new role. Thanks to the continuing contributions of our supporters, we were able to add this crucial staff position. Prior to hiring Tom, the Speakers Bureau fielded an increase in radio show and print interviews. Calls came in from Calgary, Alberta; Paris, France; Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; then from across the United States we appeared on shows in Albany, New York; Traverse City, Michigan; Taos & Carlsbad, New Mexico; Ocala, Florida and managed to get a recurring interview spot in New Orleans. Louisiana radio host Bernie Cyrus of WGSO in New Orleans, is a local legend and very connected to the music scene. He has a criminal justice background and after speaking with Peter Christ, decided to have us on every week to discuss the futile efforts of American Drug Prohibition. He even joined LEAP while on the air. State by State Walking the halls of Congress talking about ending prohibition can seem like a lonely job. This month Howard Wooldridge took a brief respite to wow audiences in Sunbury, Pennsylvania while Greg Francisco took on audiences in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Across the U.S. we continue to get speakers in front of civic club audiences… Michigan, Massachusetts, Florida and Texas are just a few of the states where LEAP speakers were active. Volunteers do much of the work booking LEAP speakers. If you’d like to see more LEAP work in your state, please email Kristin or call her at 781-393-6985 for details on volunteering. Campus Communities It is with mixed emotions we say goodbye to our campus coordinator, Jon Perri. He has left LEAP for a full time position with Students for Sensible Drug Policy (SSDP) in the Bay Area of CA, where we wish him well. College event planning really came together under Jon. Our September surge included presentations at Georgia Southern University, University of Michigan, Florida University and Towson State University. We had a different speaker every time, too, which shows our diversity. Jon left behind a strong campus outreach program, with 20 pending events and another 10 in the works for this semester. Jon also left the program in good hands! Matt Potter, our new campus coordinator, is up for the task of juggling 30 college appearances this semester. He graduated this past May from NC State University with degrees in both political science and nonprofits. While earning a double degree, he revived and led the school’s SSDP chapter. His activism didn’t stop there: while in college he served two years in the Student Senate and was chair of the Campus Community Committee, where he was instrumental in forging a strong and official relationship with local businesses and helped create a safe ride program. Matt continues to consult with SSDP as a member of their Board of Directors. International Overtures Travelin’ man…Jerry Paradis wowed the Kiwis* for 3 weeks, doing media interviews, speaking to members of parliament, presenting at civic clubs and addressing conferences while down under. * The nickname used internationally for people from New Zealand Jack Cole put another UK stamp on his passport with his trip to Cambridge. Jack addressed the 26th Annual Economic Crime Symposium. While in England, Transform, the outstanding UK drug policy reform organization, coordinated several interviews, including the Guardian, the Economist and a BBC morning show called “Today.” “Today” is the highest rated morning show in the UK, and we received many comments about the interview.

420 Update 10/06/08

Drug Truth Network Update: 4:20 Drug War NEWS from 90.1 FM in Houston and dozens of radio affiliates in the US, Canada and Australis & on the web at www.kpft.org. We provide the "unvarnished truth about the drug war" to scores of broadcast affiliates in the US, Canada and Australia. 4:20 Drug War NEWS 10/06/08 to 10/12/08 now online (3:00 ea:) Select online at www.drugtruth.net Sun - David Bratzer, Victoria BC cop 4/4 Sat - David Bratzer, Victoria BC cop 3/4 Fri - David Bratzer, Victoria BC cop 2/4 Thu - David Bratzer, Victoria BC cop discusses drug war & good policing 1/4 Wed - Zogby: "76% of Americans see drug war as failure" + Happy B'Day to DTN & FDB Tue - Terry Nelson for Law Enforcement Against Prohibition Mon - Eternal War, country version, Happy Birthday DTN! Next - Century of Lies on Tues, Cutural Baggage on Wed (Now With Transcripts): - Cultural Baggage 12:30 PM ET, 11:30 AM CT, 10:30 AM MT & 9:30 AM PT: Ryan King of Sentencing Project on disenfranchisement - Century of Lies 12:30 PM ET, 11:30 AM CT, 10:30 AM MT & 9:30 AM PT: Susan Boyd, author "From Witches to Crack Moms: Hundreds of our programs are available online at www.drugtruth.net, and www.audioport.org Check out our latest videos via www.youtube.com/fdbecker: Please become part of the solution, visit our website: www.endprohibition.org for links to the best of reform. "Prohibition is evil." - Reverend Dean Becker, Drug Truth Network Producer Dean Becker 713-849-6869 www.drugtruth.net

LEAP on the Hill: Stories from Week of October 3, 2008

“I did not know.” I had a 75 minute presentation & chat with my state of Maryland House Delegate. She said she voted against a bill in Annapolis this year to reduce mandatory minimums for small-time crack cocaine dealers. I explained how the amount of crack they were talking about was like me buying a 12 pack of beer. I could have 1-2 friends drink the 12 beers with me or I might drink the whole pack myself. ‘I wish I had had someone explain it to me like that before I voted.’ She responded. There is always work for an education specialist. Train the educator: Thanks to our new Media Director, Tom Angell, I learned that George Washington University was putting on a two hour seminar on How To Communicate with Congress. I went. Suffice to say, I learned lots. Thanks Tom. As the headlines scream of America heading back to the Depression of the 1930s, we in reform know that the lack of money to conduct the prohibition policy/war on drugs will help move legislation. The more people suffer economically, the faster we end prohibition. This is part of the use of the German word Schadenfreude. It is bitter sweet. That tens of millions of citizens have suffered being a crime victim due to prohibition or from being arrested for drug crimes has not been enough. How sad. I wrote to Ethan Nadelman of the Drug Policy Alliance and suggested his organization write to the 50 state budget finance directors about how expensive the prohibition approach is. In 2009 I will increase the % of my presentations dealing with the tens of billions wasted every year.

Crack the Disparity Newsletter Vol. 1, No. 2

[Courtesy of the Crack the Disparity Coalition] Secure Fairness in Crack Cocaine Sentencing -- Join Lobby Day this Spring Plans are underway for the second national lobby day for crack cocaine sentencing reform in Washington, DC, hosted by the Crack the Disparity Coalition. An exact date has not yet been set but we invite advocates from around the country to attend the Capitol Hill event this spring. As a participant, you will speak with Members of Congress and their staff about the unjust sentencing disparity between crack and powder cocaine and the need to eliminate it. Training and materials will be provided to you. Look for more details in the December issue of the Crack the Disparity Newsletter. Home for the Holidays By Karen Garrison Karen Garrison is the mother of twin sons sentenced to nearly two decades for a first-time nonviolent crack cocaine offense. Her son Lawrence will soon be released due to the U.S. Sentencing Commission's recent changes to the sentencing guidelines for crack cocaine offenses. The dream will be a reality for one of my sons who will be home this December. It has been 10 years and Lawrence and Lamont's room has hardly been touched. I covered the beds with heavy plastic. Long ago I gave away their clothes and shoes to shelters and halfway houses, not only because of their weight loss, but clothing goes out of style in a period of ten years. I must now begin to prepare a place for one of my twins, never forgetting that one will remain behind unjust bars. I am buying sheets, towels, and gathering healthy recipes he will enjoy preparing. I will try to purchase new furniture and have already bought the paint for his room. Coming home to those same bunk beds would just make it harder on both of us. Those are the beds he shared with his twin brother Lamont. Click here to read more. Commute Crack Cocaine Sentences in Time for the Holidays By Jasmine Tyler This month the Crack the Disparity Coalition launched the "Home for the Holidays" campaign to rally support for individuals serving excessive penalties for crack cocaine offenses who have filed commutation requests with President George W. Bush. The President expressed concern for the crack cocaine sentencing disparity in the early days of his administration. The sentencing disparity "ought to be addressed by making sure the powder-cocaine and the crack-cocaine penalties are the same," he said in 2001. "I don't believe we ought to be discriminatory." Advocates are hoping to capitalize on these sympathies to expedite applications for crack cocaine cases and increase recommendations for clemency. The campaign is promoting support for clemency applicants seeking relief from the uniquely severe penalties for low-level crack cocaine offenses that subject defendants possessing as little as 5 grams of crack cocaine to a mandatory minimum sentence of five years. A powder cocaine defendant must be convicted of selling 100 times that amount to trigger the same sentence. Since Congress has yet to act to alleviate this disparity, advocates' focus this fall is to ensure that those who are seeking clemency do not go unheard. Teen Profiles Crack Cocaine Reformer: Pamela Alexander - A Profile in Courage By Laura S., Cincinatti, OH This article was reprinted courtesy of TeenInk.com, a nonprofit, national teen magazine, book series, and website devoted entirely to teenage writing and art. On December 11, 2007, members of the United States Sentencing Commission voted unanimously to make a groundbreaking change in one of their policies. They decided that the disparity between sentences for crack cocaine crimes and those involving powder cocaine was exceedingly unjust and prejudiced. With crack users being predominantly black and powder cocaine users predominantly white, the Sentencing Commission judged the much harsher sentences for crack users to be racially biased at their core. The Commission therefore has allowed thousands currently imprisoned for crack cocaine violations to appeal their sentences before federal judges, in an effort to shorten these sentences where feasible. While this represents a major step toward racial equality and justice, one uncelebrated, independent woman put her career on the line for this same issue - seventeen years ago. Petition President Bush Join citizens concerned about the harsh mandatory minimum sentences for low-level crack cocaine offenses by telling President George Bush and Pardon Attorney Ronald Rodgers to expedite and give special consideration to commutation applicants serving excessive sentences for crack cocaine. Save the Date September 24-27, 2008: Congressional Black Caucus Foundation 38th Annual Legislative Conference, Washington, D.C. September 26-September 28, 2008: Critical Resistance 10th Anniversary Celebration and International Conference and Strategy Session, Oakland, CA October 19-22, 2008: International Community Corrections Association 16th Annual International Research Conference, "Risk, Resilience and Reentry," St. Louis, MO Spring 2009: Crack the Disparity Lobby Day, Washington, D.C. Media Attention Daily Press Editorial on Equalization of Crack and Powder Cocaine Sun-Sentinel Coverage on Prison Term Reductions for Cocaine Cases Kansas City Star Coverage on Former Kansas City Royal Baseball Player Willie Mays Aikens The Crack the Disparity Coalition includes the American Bar Association, American Civil Liberties Union, Break the Chains, Drug Policy Alliance, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, Open Society Policy Center, Restoring Dignity, Inc., Students for Sensible Drug Policy, The Sentencing Project, and United Methodist Church, General Board of Church and Society.

Americans for Safe Access: October 2008 Activist Newsletter

No Prison for Cannabis Edible Maker

A federal judge has refused to impose prison time on a California man who had produced and distributed edible medical cannabis products throughout the state.

Michael Martin Michael Martin addresses supporters at his sentencing

Despite sentencing guidelines calling for at least two and a half years in jail, U.S. District Court Judge Claudia Wilkin exercised her discretion to sentence Michael Martin, 34, to five years probation, with one year to be served in a halfway house and one year to be served in home confinement. The dramatic sentence caused the courtroom full of patients and activists to erupt in applause.

Faced with the threat of more serious charges and the specter of a federal trial in which no information about state law or medical use could be introduced, Martin pled guilty in federal court to manufacturing marijuana edibles and did not contest the government finding of more than 400 plants seized in the September 2007 DEA raid.

In a speech to the court that had observers in tears, Martin spoke eloquently about why he had acted on behalf of patients, describing the cancer patients he was proud to have helped, the support of his loving family, and how he had only acted on behalf of others, never for profit.

That speech, the enormous volume of letters of support for Martin the judge received, and the lack of any evidence that any edible produced by Mickey was diverted to recreational use, all helped the judge declare that this was a unique case that did not call for a normal sentence, and certainly not the more than three years of federal prison that the law mandates.

Comments from the bench about the tensions between state and federal laws also made clear that the judge understood medical cannabis cases to be different from other federal drug cases, and she joined several other members of the federal judiciary in departing from the government's sentencing guidelines.

"The prosecution of good people like Michael Martin, who are trying to give patients the choice of an edible, non-smoked medicine, is a travesty," said Rebecca Saltzman, ASA Chief of Staff. "The government says smoking is a bad delivery method then prosecutes those who provide an alternative -- ridiculous."

ASA played a key role in providing support for Martin and his family after he surrendered to authorities. ASA staff helped organize the grassroots response of local patients and activists who filled the courtroom during Martin's hearings and assisted him with managing the media response in the wake of DEA attempts to portray him as a dangerous drug dealer.

Martin was the state's largest producer of medical cannabis baked goods and other edibles, products that offer an alternative to smoking cannabis that is preferred by many patients. The products were available only through licensed dispensaries and carried prominent labels warning that they were cannabis products for medical use only. A majority of the more than 300 medical cannabis dispensaries in California provide edible products to their patients.

 

 

 

Calif. Job Rights Bill Vetoed, ASA Vows Fight

Late September 30, California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger vetoed AB 2279, a bill to ensure job rights for the state's medical cannabis patients.

AB 2279 would have stopped workplace discrimination against hundreds of thousands of legal patients, whose right to work was compromised by a California Supreme Court decision earlier this year. The governor's veto means that California employers can still fire patients who follow state law - even those who only use medical cannabis in the privacy of their homes. The veto is a setback for fairness and non-discrimination, but ASA will fight on in the state courts and capitol to protect and expand cannabis patients' rights.

"The governor's veto is disappointing," said Don Duncan, ASA's California Director. "But we have seen that persistent and strategic work by ASA - supported by our robust grassroots effort - can get results. In a different political climate, we would have gotten the governor's signature. But our strategy got it through the legislature, so we're hopeful for the future."

Medical cannabis patients were caught with other constituencies in the crossfire between Gov. Schwarzenegger and state lawmakers over the state's budget. The governor vetoed a record number of bills this year, including some that passed both houses unanimously and had no registered opposition, in apparent retaliation for the legislature's reluctance to adopt his controversial budget.

Patient Gets Cannabis Back from Police, Finally

In another victory for ASA's return of property campaign, a California medical cannabis patient got his cannabis back from police after a nearly three-year wait.

Jim Spray, 52, finally got Huntington Beach police to return the property they had seized from him in November 2005, but not without going through the legal wringer.

Jim Spray Jim Spray sports an ASA cap as he retrieves his property from police.

With the help of ASA Chief Counsel Joe Elford, Spray went to court three years ago, asking for the return of approximately five ounces of marijuana, twelve immature plants, a jar of concentrated cannabis, and marijuana cultivation equipment valued at $1,000. But the court denied the motion.

The ruling hinged on another case, Chavez v. Superior Court, which had said that a patient-caregiver was not entitled to the return of his medical marijuana because not all was for his personal medical use. Courts and prosecutors used this to claim that there was no circumstance under which medical marijuana could be returned.
"We had been fighting this misunderstanding in a number of cases," said Joe Elford, ASA's Chief Counsel. "But because you can only appeal the denial of a motion for return of property through a procedure known as a writ, the appellate courts could elect to ignore us, which is what they did."

But Spray was not alone. Felix Kha was fighting a similar battle with Garden Grove police, also with ASA's help. Police had already been ordered to return patient Kha's property, but the city refused, and the appeal languished for months - until Spray's case came along.

ASA Chief Counsel Joe Elford ASA Chief Counsel Joe Elford

"With Jim Spray's case filed," said Elford, "I could remind the court of appeal that the Garden Grove case was pending and that this was an issue that needed to be resolved. James Spray's case pushed the issue along."

The appeals court consolidated the cases for oral argument, with Elford arguing both. Three months later, decisions came down in favor of both patients. But the difficulties continued for Spray.

Despite being directed by the court of appeal to issue an order for the return of Spray's property, the trial court refused. So Spray and Elford had to file yet more paperwork, finally resulting in an order to police, nine months after ASA's court win.

On September 17, Spray took the order to the Huntington Beach Police Department to get his property back. Although much of the cultivation equipment had been mysteriously destroyed and the dried marijuana and plants were beyond salvage, one jar contained several grams of concentrated cannabis that is still usable, much to Spray's delight.

Congress Urges Oversight of DEA Tactics on Medical Cannabis

Several U.S. Representatives used the waning days of 110th Congress to record their continued opposition to federal enforcement raids on individuals who use or provide medical cannabis in accordance with their state law.

ASA's lobbying efforts helped convince more than a dozen members of the U.S. House of Representatives to sign a bi-partisan letter asking the Judiciary Committee to investigate DEA enforcement activity against medical cannabis dispensing collectives and their landlords. The lawmakers have asked to Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers to convene an oversight hearing on whether the DEA is using federal resources wisely and efficiently, what impact the increased level of enforcement is having on the ability of state and local governments to effectively implement their state law, and what changes to federal law are necessary.

The letter, which was spearheaded by ASA and sponsored by U.S. Representatives Sam Farr (D-CA), Dana Rohrabacher (R-CA), Barney Frank (D-MA), Maurice Hinchey (D-NY), and Dr. Ron Paul (R-TX), echoes the concerns raised by local officials across California and acknowledges the Chairman's pervious endeavors to provide oversight.

"We had hoped that oversight would have occurred by now," said Caren Woodson, ASA's Director of Government Affairs, "But given the Bush Administration's systematic obstruction of Congressional oversight the past few years, particularly of officials in the Justice Department, we expect oversight hearings to have generous support next year with a new Congress and new Administration open to change."

As a result of ASA efforts on Capitol Hill and in California this year, Chairman Conyers earlier sent a letter to DEA Acting Administrator Michelle Leonhart which questioned the Department of Justice about the enforcement tactics being used against medical cannabis patients and state programs.

Drug Truth 10/02/08

The Unvarnished Truth About the Drug War From the Drug Truth Network: (To downlad these 29:00 files, click on links below. To simply listen, go to www.drugtruth.net and select the arrow below the shows description.) Cultural Baggage for 10/01/08 David Bratzer, an active Victoria B.C. contstable and member of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition + Poppygate with Glenn Greenway, LEAP report from Terry Nelson & CB premiere of the country version of Eternal War produced by Guy Schwartz. MP3 LINK: http://www.drugtruth.net/cms/?q=audio/download/2074/FDBCB_100108.mp3 TRANSCRIPT: (TBD) Century of Lies for 09/30/08 Kurt Schmoke, former mayor of Baltimore, Deborah Peterson Small of BreakChains.org, Dr. Donald Vareen of NIDA + DTN Premiere of country version of Eternal War MP3 LINK: http://www.drugtruth.net/cms/?q=audio/download/2073/COL_093008.mp3 TRANSCRIPT: (By the weekend) PLEASE NOTE: We now have transcripts, potcasts, searchability, CMS, XML, sorts by guest name and by organization. Next - Century of Lies on Tues, Cutural Baggage on Wed, listen online at www.kpft.org: - Cultural Baggage 12:30 PM ET, 11:30 AM CT, 10:30 AM MT & 9:30 AM PT: Ryan King of Sentencing Project - Century of Lies 12:30 PM ET, 11:30 AM CT, 10:30 AM MT & 9:30 AM PT: Susan Boyd, author "From Witches to Crack Moms" Hundreds of our programs are available online at www.drugtruth.net, www.audioport.org and at www.radio4all.net. We provide the "unvarnished truth about the drug war" to scores of broadcast affiliates in the US, Canada and Now Australia!!! Programs produced at Pacifica Radio Station KPFT in Houston. www.kpft.org Check out our latest videos via www.youtube.com/fdbecker: More than 55 Drug Policy Videos online) Please become part of the solution, visit our website: www.endprohibition.org for links to the best of reform. "Prohibition is evil." - Reverend Dean Becker, Drug Truth Network Producer Dean Becker 713-849-6869 www.drugtruth.net

Drug Policy Alliance Monthly Newsletter

Making Waves with Voter Registration in Prisons

Groundbreaking voter registration work by DPA and The Ordinary People's Society (TOPS), an Alabama faith-based nonprofit organization, has ruffled feathers in the state's political establishment. The Alabama Republican Party has raised concerns about possible voter fraud in response to legitimate efforts to register thousands ofeligible potential voters who are currently in prison and to raise awareness among formerly incarcerated people about their voting rights.

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Commute Crack Sentences in Time for the Holidays

To President Bush’s credit, two of the six individuals for whom he has most recently granted clemency were serving time for unjust crack cocaine offenses.  Sign this petition and remind him that he can expand that number by using his clemency power to end a drug war injustice.

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Fayetteville, AR, Votes on Marijuana Measure

Voters in Fayetteville, Arkansas, will have the chance to make adult marijuana possession the lowest law enforcement priority at the ballot box in November. This initiative is led by Sensible Fayetteville, a coalition of groups that includes the Alliance for Reform of Drug Policy in Arkansas.

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Put "Yes on 5" on TV

Recently, California’s major law enforcement groups tried  (unsucessfully) to get Proposition 5 — the largest sentencing and prison reform in U.S. history — thrown off the state ballot.  Opposition to Prop. 5 is mounting from some of the staunchest opponents of criminal justice reform in the state but, with your help, we'll reach TV audiences, make ourselves heard above our opponents' lies and fear-mongering and win in November.

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Ethan Nadelmann Meets Latin American Leaders

DPA Executive Director Ethan Nadelmann was invited to speak at the second meeting of the Latin American Commission on Drugs and Democracy earlier this month in Bogota, Colombia, where he met with the presidents of three Latin American countries. An extensive interview with Nadelmann was published in Brazil's leading newspaper, O Globo.  

Drug Truth 09/25/08

The Unvarnished Truth About the Drug War From the Drug Truth Network: (To downlad these 29:00 files, click on links below. To simply listen, go to www.drugtruth.net and select the arrow below the shows description.) Cultural Baggage for 09/24/08 Report from Martin Jansen in Nimbin Australia regarding police efforts to close their Hemp Musem + Poppygate Report with Glenn Greenway. MP3 LINK: http://www.drugtruth.net/cms/?q=audio/download/2062/FDBCB_092408.mp3 TRANSCRIPT: (To be posted by Friday) Century of Lies for 09/23/08 Jack Cole director of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition reports on recent trip to UK on behalf of LEAP MP3 LINK: http://www.drugtruth.net/cms/?q=audio/download/2063/COL_092308.mp3 TRANSCRIPT: (By the weekend) PLEASE NOTE: We now have transcripts, potcasts, searchability, CMS, XML, sorts by guest name and by organization. Next - Century of Lies on Tues, Cutural Baggage on Wed, listen online at www.kpft.org: - Cultural Baggage 12:30 PM ET, 11:30 AM CT, 10:30 AM MT & 9:30 AM PT: TBD - Century of Lies 12:30 PM ET, 11:30 AM CT, 10:30 AM MT & 9:30 AM PT: TBD Hundreds of our programs are available online at www.drugtruth.net, www.audioport.org and at www.radio4all.net. We provide the "unvarnished truth about the drug war" to scores of broadcast affiliates in the US, Canada and Now Australia!!! Programs produced at Pacifica Radio Station KPFT in Houston. www.kpft.org Check out our latest videos via www.youtube.com/fdbecker: More than 55 Drug Policy Videos online) Please become part of the solution, visit our website: www.endprohibition.org for links to the best of reform. "Prohibition is evil." - Reverend Dean Becker, Drug Truth Network Producer Dean Becker 713-849-6869 www.drugtruth.net

420 Drug NEWS 09/22/08

Drug Truth Network Update: 4:20 Drug War NEWS from 90.1 FM in Houston and dozens of radio affiliates in the US, Canada and Australis & on the web at www.kpft.org. We provide the "unvarnished truth about the drug war" to scores of broadcast affiliates in the US, Canada and Australia. 4:20 Drug War NEWS 09/22/08 to 09/28/08 now online (3:00 ea:) Select online at www.drugtruth.net Sun - Report from Martin Jansen in Nimbin Australia 6/6 Sat - Report from Martin Jansen in Nimbin Australia 5/6 Fri - Report from Martin Jansen in Nimbin Australia 4/6 Thu - Report from Martin Jansen in Nimbin Australia 3/6 Wed - Report from Martin Jansen in Nimbin Australia 2/6 Tue - Report from Martin Jansen in Nimbin Australia where police forces seek to shut Hemp Museum, destroy counter culture 1/6 Mon - Dallas Morn News: 175 busted in Gulf Cartel Next - Century of Lies on Tues, Cutural Baggage on Wed (Now With Transcripts): - Cultural Baggage 12:30 PM ET, 11:30 AM CT, 10:30 AM MT & 9:30 AM PT: Drug News "Down Under" - Century of Lies 12:30 PM ET, 11:30 AM CT, 10:30 AM MT & 9:30 AM PT: Jack Cole, Director, Law Enforcement Against Prohibition Hundreds of our programs are available online at www.drugtruth.net, and www.audioport.org Check out our latest videos via www.youtube.com/fdbecker: Please become part of the solution, visit our website: www.endprohibition.org for links to the best of reform. "Prohibition is evil." - Reverend Dean Becker, Drug Truth Network Producer Dean Becker 713-849-6869 www.drugtruth.net